This is a TV commercial I see sometimes on TV recently. It is cute that the colorful clay puppet gets panicked by finding out that he has ‘tire’ around his waist (→ click here to see other videos). Western men seem to get fat around their waist, as in the video, so called ‘tire’ or ‘love handles,’ comparing with Oriental men who tend to get fat on their belly but not their sides. M is also worrying about his tire and now he religiously goes on diet and works out at a gym few times a week, tracking his weight on his iphone app weightbot.

Change4Life, which made this TV ad, is England’s national social marketing campaign to promote heathly weight, began in January 2009. It aims to prevent people from becoming overweight by encouraging them to eat well, move more and live longer, and supports the overall Healthy Weight, Healthy Lives strategy. According to the article of the Guardian in October 2009, about a million people in England are morbidly obese with a BMI of more than 40. One in four adults is obese (a BMI of 30+), and government statistics estimate that the number will go up to 41% by 2025, and will be more than half, astonishingly 9 in 10 including ‘overweight’ with a BMI of 25〜30 by 2050. Kids are not exception either – 10% of six-year-olds are clinically obese, and the number of obese children has tripled over the past 20 years.

The average size of a british woman is British size 16 (American size 14), and average height is 163.7 cm (5′ 4.4″). I don’t see many overweight people in London, but more in the countryside. However, you mostly see ‘size zero‘ models on catwalks or a fashion magazines, contrary to the average size of women in UK. The fashion industry is often criticized because of this trend, as it creates unrealistic pressures for young women and the high incidence of eating disorders. Although many young women are obsessed about diet and loosing weight, the Fabulous Body Survey 2008 reveals that the women’s size that men like is 2 sizes bigger than the women’s ideal size. Also in Japan models of men’s magazines are more voluptuous (they especially like big breasts) than the stick-thin models in female magazines. Supposedly men prefer the female figures with bigger breasts and hips because of biological reason: so that the women can give a birth as many of their offsprings as possible. At the end of the day, I think women’s ideal body image is a result of a rivalry among women, and to increase their self-esteem that they can fit in a smallest size possible, like muscles do for men.